I've just bought a Latitude 11 which is my first USB-C powered device and its main purpose is a spare PC at work so I'm thinking having a charger there will be handy however with it being USB-C, I'm wondering if I should look into something that can quick charge the phone as well as power the tablet particularly as the Note 4's replacement will likely be USB-C. At the moment I've been using Aukey so I'm wondering if there's something similar although I'm wary of the dire warnings about only using official Dell supplies when I know there's been issues with USB-C products not meeting spec in the states and damaging the devices.

The first catch is that it doesn't support QC, if you want QC you need an alternate product which surprise, surprise doesn't support USB-C The reviews are mixed for USB-C charging for higher power devices like the Core-m powered Latitude 11 as well, it seems you can't just use a normal USB port with a USB-C cable if you want to charge at the correct rate.

The more I read, the more I'm thinking it's probably easier just to go with a Dell charger as it's a lot cheaper than the Anker which doesn't do QC anyway.

My Windows 10 Mobile is USB-C, and yeah, I am wary about using non-official chargers. I only have one charger, which I use in work, but I have lots of Wireless chargers at home and I figure I'm more likely to need a quick charge in work.

You could potentially buy the products from the Google Play store. I have a few as I got the Nexus 6p. Needless to say they all work perfectly, feel very well built and great returns service and policy with Google.

No, USB-C is technically just the connector so it can be USB2 spec. Even USB 3.1 with a type-C connector doesn't guarantee anything as there's different power levels and capabilities that can be handled on the port.